“…The sustainable urban development evaluation frameworks need to respond to several requirements in order to be effectively applied as decision and design support tools to urban design practice in the ex ante evaluation of design proposals. They need to & have an integrated conception of sustainable urban development (Gasparatos et al, 2009;Hacking and Guthrie, 2008;Munda, 2006) & reflect a widely accepted vision that provides guidance during the design process (Cole, 1999(Cole, , 2005Jensen and Elle, 2007;Leitmann, 1999) & agree objectives and targets to work towards, instead of comparing to the reference baseline scenario (Cole, 1999;Pope et al, 2004) & allow for early stage deployment, when few data on a project are available (Cole, 1999;Hunt et al, 2008) & use disaggregate measures and include MCA features (Ding, 2008;Gasparatos et al, 2009;Hacking and Guthrie, 2008;Munda, 2006) & offer interaction with the design and be sensitive to design changes (Cole, 1999;Leitmann, 1999) & allow for (re)iteration, assessing alternatives and supporting the evolution of the design (Becker, 2004;Cole, 1999Cole, , 2005Leitmann, 1999;Oliveira and Pinho, 2010) & offer communication methods that make the results clear and understandable to the various stakeholders (Becker, 2004;Cole, 1999;Leitmann, 1999;Oliveira and Pinho, 2010;Walton et al, 2005) & assess the planning process itself in terms of dialogue and participation of the various stakeholders (Gaffron et al, 2008;Khakee, 2003;Munda, 2006;Oliveira and Pinho, 2010).…”